Category: Airline industry news

General News in the airline industry

  • Malaysia Airlines Flies Daily to Kathmandu

    Malaysia Airlines Flies Daily to Kathmandu

     

    Malaysia Airlines will be increasing its frequency between Kuala Lumpur and Kathmandu to seven times weekly beginning 1 June 2013.

     

    “With the daily frequency, our customers will be able to travel conveniently and at ease. On top of that, the increased frequency will provide excellent connectivity between Malaysia and various other destinations on Malaysia Airlines and our oneworld routes.”

     

    “Kathmandu has been a wonderful experience for us at Malaysia Airlines and our customers. We are not only receiving good traction from the labour market but given that Kathmandu is likened to heaven on earth, many Malaysians are putting this destination in their must visit list. Kathmandu is a hub for independent travellers as well as a growing vacation spot catering to all budgets. Surrounded by serene mountains, it is a perfect place for those who yearn for a relaxing holiday or even a challenging mountain climbing adventure,”

     

    A two-class configured Boeing 737-800 aircraft with 144 economy class seats and 16 business class seats is being used for this Kuala Lumpur-Kathmandu return service. Flight MH170 departs Kuala Lumpur at 8.55am to arrive at Kathmandu at 11.30am. The return flight MH171 departs Kathmandu at 12.20pm to arrive at Kuala Lumpur at 7.15pm

     

  • Jet airways – transit in Mumbai

    Please check this link

    http://www.jetairways.com/NL/NL/AboutUs/ThroughCheck-InPartners.aspx

     

    Jet Airways offers Through Check-in facility for guests traveling on Jet Airways flights* and connecting on to the following Through Check-in Partners provided it is on the same ticket.

    Through check-in partners
    Airline Via
    Air Canada London Heathrow / Newark / Toronto / Brussels / Hong Kong
    Air France Mumbai / Delhi / Bengaluru / Chennai / London Heathrow / Brussels / Newark / Toronto
    Alitalia Mumbai / Delhi / London Heathrow / Brussels / Milan Malpensa
    All Nippon Airways Bangkok / Hong Kong / Mumbai / Singapore
    American Airlines Delhi / London Heathrow / Newark / Toronto / Brussels
    Austrian Airlines London Heathrow / Brussels
    Bangkok Airways Bangkok / Singapore
    British Airways Bengaluru / Mumbai / Delhi / Chennai / London Heathrow / Brussels / Abu Dhabi / Dubai / Singapore / Bangkok / Jeddah / Milan / Muscat
    British Midland Airways Brussels / London Heathrow / Riyadh
    Brussels Airlines London Heathrow / Brussels
    Cathay Pacific Mumbai / Delhi / Chennai / Hong Kong / Bangkok / Singapore / Dubai
    Delta Newark / Toronto / Brussels / Mumbai / London Heathrow / Dubai
    Dragonair Hong Kong / Bengaluru
    Emirates Mumbai / Kuwait / Doha / Bangkok
    Ethiopian Airways Dubai / Jeddah / Riyadh
    Etihad Airways Mumbai / Delhi / Chennai / Abu Dhabi / Thiruvananthapuram / Kochi / Kozhikode / Hyderabad
    Finnair Mumbai / Delhi / London Heathrow / Brussels
    Gulf Air Mumbai / Bahrain
    Iberia Lineas Aereas De Espana S.A London Heathrow / Brussels / Milan Malpensa
    Japan Airlines Bangkok / Hong Kong / Singapore
    JetLite For all inbound and outbound flights
    JetBlue Airways Newark
    Kenya Airways Mumbai / Dubai
    KLM Abu Dhabi / Dubai / Delhi / Brussels / London Heathrow
    Koren Airlines Mumbai / Bangkok / Singapore / Hong Kong
    Kuwait Airways Kuwait
    Lot Polish Airlines Brussels / London Heathrow
    Lufthansa Mumbai / Delhi / Bengaluru / Hyderabad / Chennai / London Heathrow / Brussels / Abu Dhabi / Dubai / Riyadh / Singapore
    Malaysia Airlines Bengaluru / Chennai / Delhi / Hyderabad / Mumbai
    Malev Hungarian Airline Brussels
    Oman Air Bengaluru / Chennai / Delhi / Mumbai / Muscat / Doha / Bangkok / Hyderabad
    Qantas Mumbai / Singapore / Bangkok / Hong Kong
    Qatar Airways Chennai / Hyderabad / Mumbai / Doha / Singapore
    Saudi Arabian Airlines Mumbai
    Scandinavian Airlines Brussels / London Heathrow
    South African Airways Mumbai
    Swiss International Mumbai / Newark / Toronto / Brussels / London Heathrow / Delhi
    Thai Airways Bangkok (Thai Airways operated International flights only)
    United Airlines Delhi / Hong Kong / London Heathrow / Mumbai / Newark / Toronto / Brussels / Kuwait / Dubai
    US Airways Brussels / London Heathrow Heathrow / Newark
    Vietnam Airlines Bangkok / Singapore
    Virgin Atlantic Mumbai / Delhi / London Heathrow / Dubai

     

    Guests travelling on Jet Airways and transiting through the above cities for their international flight can be through checked up to their final international destination.

    Guests departing on Jet Airways flights and connecting on to these international airlines can now be Through Checked-in up to their final international destination, provided the passenger name in the booking record of both Jet Airways and international airline booking are identical and matching.

    Note: The Through Check-in facility is currently not available for flights originating from Kochi and Kathmandu.

    Through Check-in Guidelines

    Effective August 17, 2012 Jet Airways and JetKonnect will permit Through check-in on separate tickets in the below mentioned conditions –

    Domestic India journey:

    • Separate tickets are booked for travel within India (Domestic)
    • The stopover is less than 24 hrs.
    • The journey is on Jet Airways / JetKonnect and the connecting airline is Jet Airways / JetKonnect.
    • Itinerary is ticketed on 589 / 705 document

    International journey:

    • Separate tickets are booked for travel within India (Domestic) and the International journey is to / from Dubai, Singapore, Kathmandu, Bangkok and Muscat only.
    • The stopover is less than 12 hrs.
    • The journey is on Jet Airways / JetKonnect and the connecting airline is Jet Airways / JetKonnect.
    • Itinerary is ticketed on 589 / 705 document.

    Note:

    • International baggage rules will apply to Domestic part of the journey when travelling to the International destinations mentioned above.
    • Excess baggage charge will apply only once from origin upto the final destination.

    If your bookings are held on separate tickets, please ensure that enough time is allowed between the arrival at the airport, collection of baggage, clearance of immigration and customs and check-in for the onward flight, as well as any potential delays, in order avoid the inconvenience and costs of a missed flight. Please note that it is necessary to have a valid visa for the transit destination.

     

    The Through Check-in facility can be availed up to 12 hours prior to the departure of the connecting international flight.

    At the first point of Check-in from Jet Airways station, our check-in agent will Through Check-in and tag your bags up to your final international destination. They will also give you your boarding pass for your onward international flight.

    On arrival at Mumbai, Chennai & Delhi domestic airport, guests will have to identify their baggage and inform the Jet Airways ground personnel who would be present in the Domestic Airport arrival area.

    At Delhi, guests are requested to carry their baggage in the inter-terminal coach provided by the Airports Authority of India from domestic terminal to international terminal.

    Note:

    Jet Airways ticket International Airline ticket Through Check-in
    Paper Ticket Paper Ticket Available
    Paper Ticket eTicket Available only for British Airways, KLM, Northwest, Emirates, United Airlines, Qantas, American Airlines, Gulf Air, Swiss International Airlines, Qatar, Thai Airways, Brussels Airlines, Continental Airlines & Finnair.
    eTicket Paper Ticket Available only for British Airways, KLM, Northwest, Emirates, United Airlines, Qantas, American Airlines, Gulf Air, Swiss International Airlines, Qatar, Thai Airways, Brussels Airlines, Continental Airlines & Finnair.
    eTicket eTicket Available only for British Airways, KLM, Northwest, Emirates, United Airlines, Qantas, American Airlines, Gulf Air, Swiss International Airlines, Qatar, Thai Airways, Brussels Airlines, Continental Airlines & Finnair.

    In Mumbai, once your baggage is identified, Jet Airways staff will transport your baggage from the domestic terminal to the international terminal. Guests connecting from Jet Airways Domestic to Jet Airways International do not have to identify their baggage in the Domestic arrival hall. Their baggage will be transferred directly to the international flight.

    Through Checked in Guests

    Guests who have been through checked in by our Through Check-in partner airlines and given through boarding passes with baggage tagged to final domestic destination(s) will complete their immigration and custom formalities. Guests are then requested to proceed to screen their checked in baggage at our check-in counter located at international Terminal 2A. Guests will hand over their baggage to 9W staff for onward transfer to the domestic Terminal 1B. The international airline boarding passes would not be exchanged. Guests will then proceed to board the Inter-terminal coach for transfer to the domestic Terminal 1B.

    Non-Through Checked-in Guests

    Guests holding confirmed onward booking on Jet Airways flights but have not been through checked in, can check-in at the international Terminal 2A or 2C* after completing their immigration and custom formalities. Guests need to screen their baggage at the check-in counter and will be issued their domestic boarding passes as well as baggage tags for their final destination on Jet Airways flights. Our staff will take over the baggage and guests will then proceed to board the inter-terminal coach for transfer to the domestic Terminal 1B.

    On arrival at the domestic Terminal 1B, guests are requested to go through the Transit Passenger Channel in the Arrival Hall, which brings them into the CISF Security Screening Area. From this point guests will go through CISF security screening together with local joining guests prior to entering the Security Hold Area.

    Please note check-in at these international terminals closes 60 minutes prior to scheduled departure time of the flight(s). Check-in at international terminals is ONLY for flights departing the same day.

    Currently this facility is available between 2230 hours to 1000 hours daily at Terminal 2A and between 2230 hours to 0700 hours daily at Terminal 2C*.

    Ticketing facility is also available at both terminals.

    The procedures of Through Check-in from domestic to international airlines still remain the same as mentioned above.

    Through Check-in from Jet Airways to British Airways at Mumbai

    Since the British Airways check-in system is open and available for check-in only after 1100 hours (IST), guests traveling only on those Jet Airways flights, which depart (from origin) after 1100 hours will be through checked-in. Please note through check-in from Jet Airways to British Airways flights is allowed up to 3 hours of British Airways flight departure time.

    Through Check-in from Jet Airways to Northwest at Mumbai

    Guests traveling on Jet Airways and connecting on to Northwest at Mumbai will have to hand over their bags on arrival to the NW security personnel present at the Domestic Arrival hall. The North West staff will then transfer the bags to the International Terminal. Please note this facility can be availed by guests arriving into Mumbai between 1500 hours and 2230 hours. Guests arriving into Mumbai before 1500 hrs and after 2230 hrs will have to personally carry their baggage to the international terminal.

    Through Check-in from Jet Airways to Cathay Pacific at Delhi

    Guests traveling on Jet Airways and connecting on to Cathay Pacific at Delhi will have to hand over their bags on arrival at the domestic airport to the Cathay Pacific staff present at the domestic arrival hall. The Cathay Pacific staff will then transfer the bags to the International Terminal.

    Through Check-in from Jet Airways to KLM at Delhi

    Guests traveling on Jet Airways and connecting on to KLM at Delhi will have to collect their checked baggage on arrival in the Domestic arrival hall, carry it to the International terminal and have it re-screened / X-rayed before handing the bags over to KLM representatives at the baggage drop point / check-in desk.

    Guests can avail of the inter-terminal coaches operated at Mumbai and Delhi by the Airports Authority of India between international and domestic airports and vice-versa.

    Through Check-in from Jet Airways to Qantas at Mumbai

    Guests traveling on Jet Airways and connecting on to Qantas at Mumbai can avail the baggage transfer facility only up to 1600 hours.

    Through Check-in with United Airlines via London

    Guests travelling on Jet Airways flights from Mumbai and Delhi and travelling onwards to the U.S.A can now check-in their luggage to their final destination in the U.S. Guests will also be given the boarding card, at the point of origin, for their onward journey from London to the U.S.

    Through Check-in with SN Brussels via London

    Guests travelling on Jet Airways flights to London and travelling onwards to Brussels on SN Brussels or British Airways can avail of through check-in facility. Guests traveling from Brussels via London to Mumbai / Delhi and onwards to other domestic destinations can also through check-in their baggage.

    Through Check-in with Lufthansa

    Guests can now avail of the Through Check-in facility via the 5 gateway points in India, viz: Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi, Hyderabad and Chennai and also via our international gateway London.

    Guests have to report to the international airline check-in counter to identify their baggage, check / verify their visa and collect new boarding passes and baggage tags.

    Customs formalities will have to be completed by guests at the international terminal at Mumbai / Chennai / Delhi / Bangalore / Hyderabad as per Government of India’s regulations.

  • Best airlines of 2012

    The following airlines have received the best airline award by SkyTrac

    The program has been ranking the airlines participating in the program based on reviews and the quality of service
    World’s Top 10 Airlines – 2012

    1. QATAR AIRWAYS
    2. Asiana Airlines
    3. Singapore Airlines
    4. Cathay Pacific Airways
    5. ANA All Nippon Airways
    6. Etihad Airways
    7. Turkish Airlines
    8. Emirates
    9. Thai Airways
    10. Malaysia Airlines
  • AI-ExtrafeesatDelhiAirport

    Increase in Development Fee at IGI Airport (DEL)

    The Development Fee (Code YM) being collected at IGI Airport, New Delhi, has increased with effect from 1st April, 2012 due to increase in Service Tax.

    Name of Fee Development Fee
    Code YM
    Effective Ticketing Date 01 April 2012
    Application Per passenger departing
    Domestic departure INR 225
    International departure INR 1461

    The fee is inclusive of Service Tax.  All other conditions remain the same.   The new rate has been updated in all pricing systems.

  • AI-EXTRAfeesforalreadyticketedpassengers

    — May 2, 2012 —

    Development Fee at CSI Airport (BOM)

    
    The Airports Economic Regulatory Authority (AERA) in India vide Order No 02/2012-13 dated 16th April, 2012 has granted permission to levy Development Fee (DF) for passengers departing from Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport (BOM) effective 2st May, 2012 for a period of 23 months.
    
    Name of Fee Development Fee
    Code YM
    Effective Ticketing Date 02 May 2012
    Effective Travel date 02 May 2012
    Application Per passenger departing
    Domestic departure INR 113
    International departure INR 675
    Administrator Mumbai International Airport Ltd
    Exemptions
    • Infants (children age under 2 years)
    • Persons travelling on official duty on aircraft operated by Indian Armed Forces
    • Holders of Diplomatic passports
    • Airline crew on duty including sky marshals and crew on board (does not include Dead Head Crew or ground personnel)
    • Transit/Transfer Passengers (up to 24 hours). A passenger is treated in transit only if onward travel journey is within 24 hrs from arrival into Mumbai and is part of the same ticket, in case 2 separate tickets are issued it would not be treated as a transit passenger.”
    • Involuntary rerouting due technical problem or weather conditions
    • Persons travelling on official duty for UN Peace Keeping Missions
    
    
    This charge to be collected on the ticket by all airlines. 
    The tax is interlineable. The lifting carrier is responsible for remittance. 
    
    The fee is inclusive of Service Tax.
    
    IATA has confirmed update on their system and distributed to all GDS for implementation.
  • ArewegettingtaxedforFrequentFlierMiles?

    Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool
    It’s tax season, which means our mailboxes are filling up with W-2s and 1099s and other financial forms sent to the IRS to tell them how much income we need to declare. We expect statements from employers, banks, and brokerages reporting the interest or dividend income we collected in 2011. But Citibank customers may have an extra surprise in store for them.

    It seems that Citigroup’s (C) Citibank ran a promotion last year offering thousands of frequent flier miles as a reward for opening a bank account. That’s not a novel practice — such promotions are commonplace in the credit card world. What’s out of the ordinary is this: Citibank is sending out 1099 forms reporting the miles as income.

    Fly Free Now, Pay the Toll Later

    Mile awards are nothing new, but reporting them to the IRS is far from standard practice.

    The company says it is just complying with the tax code. It cites as its reason the 2012 instructions for the 1099-MISC form, which states that $600 or more in awards or prizes is taxable income.

    If you receive a 1099 form from Citibank for miles, you have two main options: Ignore that income on your tax return, or report it.

    Option 1: Ignore It

    Ignoring it seems very reasonable. If you ask a good tax pro whether your frequent flier miles are reportable income, she’ll generally say no. The IRS has even weighed in on this in the past, explaining that due partly to the complicated nature of mile awards, it has not been actively enforcing collections on miles.

    A 2002 IRS announcement notes: “Because of these unresolved issues, the IRS has not pursued a tax enforcement program with respect to promotional benefits such as frequent flier miles.”

    Thus, it would seem that you’re safe in disregarding miles awarded to you in various promotions, right? Well, not necessarily. Citibank may have messed things up.

    Option 2: Report It

    When you receive a 1099 form, it generally means that the issuing entity has reported the same information to the IRS. Thus, the IRS will be looking to see the reported data on your tax return. So that 1099 form that Citibank may have sent you is not just between you and Citibank — it’s between you, Citibank and Uncle Sam.

    One reason certain tax returns get flagged for audits is that some income seems to have not been reported. So, logic goes, if you ignore a 1099 statement for those frequent flier miles, your odds of being audited may go up.

    There are some times when miles are clearly taxable income to be reported, though. That’s usually when they are transformed into cash or become more cash-like. For example, there are some online markets where you can trade in your miles or other reward points, receiving a set cash value.

    Nuts and Bolts

    Let’s say you’re considering reporting the miles. How big a deal would that be? Well, imagine that you were awarded 25,000 miles. Citibank has valued them at $0.025 cents apiece, so that comes to a total reported value of $625. If you’re in the 25% tax bracket, that represents $161.25 in extra taxes that you’ll owe — on a trip or trips that you may not have taken and may never even get around to taking.

    In a Los Angeles Times article, David Lazarus offers the example of Larry Fechter of Palm Springs, Calif., who was awarded 25,000 miles: “Adding insult to injury, Fechter said, his new Citi accounts paid less than $4 in interest on the cash he’d deposited.”

    What to Do

    If you receive this 1099, it will up to you what you do with it. Ignoring it and running a greater risk of being audited is not an appealing consequence. But for the millions of Americans who file honest tax returns, it may not be the end of the world, either. If your return is audited because of the discrepancy caused by Citibank miles, you or your tax pro representative could make a case for why the “miscellaneous income” should be omitted, citing the IRS’s own policy, from 2002.

    With any luck, the IRS will clarify this matter in the near future. But there’s a good chance it won’t happen in time for your 2011 tax return. Until then, Citibank’s customers have a choice to make.

  • AmericanAirlinesParentAMRFilesforBankruptcyasHortonIsNamedCEO

    American Airlines Parent AMR Files for Bankruptcy as Horton Is Named CEO
    By Phil Milford, Mary Schlangenstein and David McLaughlin – Nov 29, 2011 9:01 PM PT
    Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) — Will Randow, an analyst at Citigroup Inc., talks about AMR Corp.’s filing for bankruptcy protection and the outlook for the airline industry. The parent of American Airlines filed Chapter 11 papers after failing to secure cost-cutting labor agreements and sitting out a round of mergers that dropped it from the world’s largest airline to No. 3. Randow speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)
    Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) — American Airlines parent AMR Corp. filed for bankruptcy after failing to secure cost-cutting labor agreements and sitting out a round of mergers that dropped it from the world’s largest airline to No. 3 in the U.S. With the filing, American became the final large U.S. full-fare airline to seek court protection from creditors. Chairman Gerard Arpey will retire and be replaced by Thomas Horton, AMR said. Shannon Pettypiece reports on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)
    An American Airlines flight from Port au-Prince to New York awaits passengers. AMR was determined to avoid Chapter 11 in the years after the 2001 terrorist attacks, as peers used bankruptcy to shed costly pension and retiree benefit plans and restructure debt.
    Signage for AMR Corp., parent company of American Airlines Inc., stands outside of the company’s headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas on Nov. 29, 2011.
    American Airlines parent AMR Corp. (AMR) filed for bankruptcy after failing to secure cost-cutting labor agreements and sitting out a round of mergers that dropped it from the world’s largest airline to No. 3 in the U.S.
    With the filing, American became the last of the so-called U.S. legacy airlines to seek court protection from creditors. The Fort Worth, Texas-based company, which traces its roots to 1920s air-mail operations in the Midwest, listed $24.7 billion in assets and $29.6 billion in debt in Chapter 11 papers filed yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.
    “It’s painful but probably necessary,” John Strickland, an aviation analyst at JLS Consulting in London, said in a telephone interview. “They will have to go through the whole process that their peers have gone through.”
    Job and flight reductions are likely in the future as AMR seeks to trim expenses and leave bankruptcy in less than 15 months, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Tom Horton said yesterday. Normal flight schedules will continue on American and its American Eagle regional unit for now, along with the airline’s frequent-flier program, the company said. A spinoff of American Eagle, which already had been delayed from this year into 2012, is on hold, Horton said.
    Court Hearing
    American’s cost structure compared with other airlines had become “untenable,” said Harvey Miller, the company’s bankruptcy lawyer, at a court hearing yesterday in Manhattan. The airline “fought ferociously” to avoid filing for bankruptcy, and now planned to use the court process to turn around its business to become a profitable global airline, Miller said.
    At the hearing, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane approved American’s requests to pay employees, continue its customer programs, and pay what the company said are vendors that are critical to maintaining its operations.
    American said in court papers that it needed permission to pay $50 million in claims from critical vendors. Miller said the company will later request approval to pay an additional $35 million in claims.
    “We are talking about an emergency and the survival of this company,” Miller said about the request. “We have to operate this airline and assure customers that when they book on American, that flight is going to be there and that flight is going to depart on time.”
    Arpey Retires
    Horton, 50, most recently AMR’s president, replaced Gerard Arpey yesterday as chairman and CEO. Arpey, 53, opted to retire after the board asked him to stay, Horton said. Arpey will join Emerald Creek Group LLC, a private-equity firm founded by former Continental Airlines Inc. CEO Larry Kellner, on Dec. 1, the firm said in a statement.
    Arpey supported the bankruptcy filing, Horton said. Arpey decided to leave after concluding that AMR would be better served with new leadership “because it was going in a different direction,” Tom Roberts, an attorney at Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP who represents AMR, said in a telephone interview. “It was his decision because he had been the one that had been leading the charge for so many years to avoid bankruptcy.”
    AMR doesn’t plan to seek so-called debtor-in-possession financing to fund operations during bankruptcy, Horton said at a news conference at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.
    AMR’s board voted unanimously Monday night to file for bankruptcy after considering options for months, Horton said. AMR was determined to avoid Chapter 11 as air travel fell and losses mounted after the 2001 terrorist attacks, even as peers used bankruptcy to shed costly pension and retiree benefit plans and restructure debt. Rival carriers later combined, giving them larger route networks that were more attractive to lucrative corporate travel customers.
    ‘Untenable’ Gap
    “It became increasingly clear that the cost gap between us and our biggest competitors was untenable,” Horton said on a conference call. “The economic climate has been most uncertain, oil prices remain high and volatile, and all of that taken together led to the conclusion that now is the right time to take this step and put the company back on the path to long-term success.”
    AMR plunged 84 percent to 26 cents in New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday. The shares earlier fell as much as 88 percent. Unlike secured creditors, shareholders typically get paid last in a bankruptcy and often receive nothing for their shares.
    The stock had declined 79 percent this year on concern that a Chapter 11 filing was inevitable as AMR’s losses drained cash reserves. AMR had $4.1 billion in unrestricted cash and short- term investments as of Nov. 25, Chief Financial Officer Isabella Goren said in an affidavit.
    Union Talks
    AMR’s bankruptcy filing “resets” the process for union talks, Horton said. American had been engaged in negotiations with unions for all of its major work groups as far back as 2006, seeking to boost employee productivity and erase part of what it said was an $800 million labor-cost disadvantage to other carriers.
    The company has the highest operating costs among the four surviving major U.S. network airlines, Goren said in court papers. AMR is set to post its fourth-straight annual loss this year and analysts had forecast a loss for next year as well.
    “AMR cannot continue to progress toward a viable and stable future without further, significant remediation of its uncompetitive cost structure,” Goren said.
    American fell from its perch as the biggest airline by traffic after Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL) bought Northwest Airlines Corp. in 2008, then slid to No. 3 last year when UAL Corp.’s United Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc. merged.
    Hub-and-Spoke
    All operate traditional hub-and-spoke systems, with their own regional units or partner airlines ferrying passengers to be collected at larger airports. US Airways Group Inc. (LCC) is the other major carrier with that kind of route network. It ranks No. 5 in the U.S. by traffic, behind Southwest Airlines Co. (LUV), the largest discounter.
    In late 2005, Delta, Northwest and UAL were all under bankruptcy protection. US Airways left Chapter 11 in September of that year through a merger with America West Holdings Corp.
    American and leaders of its pilots’ union were scheduled to meet with federal mediators on Dec. 6 to provide an update on contract talks that stalled two weeks ago. The two sides hadn’t set a date to resume negotiations since Allied Pilots Association leaders declined to send a Nov. 14 contract offer to union members for a vote, saying it “clearly” would be rejected.
    ‘Leaner, Stronger’
    “You would expect a leaner, stronger company to emerge from bankruptcy,” said Chris Logan, an analyst at Echelon Research & Advisory LLP in London. “As they are in Chapter 11, it will be more easy to demand concessions from the labor force.”
    American’s pilots, flight attendants, mechanics and baggage handlers wanted to use the contract talks to regain some of the $1.6 billion in annual concessions they gave in 2003 to help the company avoid bankruptcy.
    “We agreed to sacrifice based on the expectation that our airline would regain its leadership position,” David Bates, president of the Allied Pilots Association, told members in an e-mail. “What has transpired since has been nothing short of a ‘perfect storm.’”
    The Transport Workers Union, which represents aircraft mechanics and baggage handlers, “will fight like hell to make sure that front-line workers don’t pay an unfair price for management’s failings,” James Little, the union’s international president, said in a statement.
    ‘Loss of Jobs’
    “It’s a loss of jobs I worry most about,” Laura Glading, president of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, said in an interview. “That’s a horrible, horrible nightmare in this economy. We’ll do what we can to mitigate that as much as possible.”
    AMR had about 80,800 employees at the end of September, including 67,100 at American, with the rest at American Eagle, cargo operations and other units, according to the company’s October earnings release. American has 8,700 active pilots, with another 950 on furlough, and 17,000 flight attendants.
    Among the company’s largest unsecured creditors listed in court papers was Wilmington Trust Corp., trustee for holders of $460 million in 6.25 percent convertible senior notes due in 2014. AMR on Sept. 27 sold $725.7 million of 10-year bonds backed by aircraft to refinance maturing debt. The company paid the highest interest rates since 2009 to raise the cash.
    The 8.625 percent notes due in October 2021 fell 2.5 cents to 96 cents on the dollar as of 8:20 a.m. in New York, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
    Sept. 11
    After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, carriers saw “a dramatic drop in air travel” for 18 months to two years, FareCompare.com CEO Rick Seaney said in an interview. Airlines in the U.S. lost about $9.7 billion in the year following the attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York and damaged the Pentagon. American, which operated two of the four hijacked planes used in the attacks, posted losses for four straight years afterward.
    American responded by negotiating the union concessions that helped to restore profit in 2006 and 2007. The carrier had blamed losses since then partly on its labor costs and slower- than-expected gains from business ventures with partners across the Atlantic and Pacific.
    The airline also has a fleet of older, less fuel-efficient planes that put it at a disadvantage when fuel prices rise. AMR spent $1.56 billion more on fuel through the first nine months of this year than a year earlier, according to the company’s third-quarter earnings release.
    Flights Shuffled
    In September 2009, the carrier shuffled flight schedules to increase operations in Chicago, New York, Dallas-Fort Worth, Los Angeles and Miami to attract more high-fare business travelers.
    “Airlines still face that fundamental issues of cost levels versus achievable revenues in the market place,” Strickland, the JLS analyst, said. “Higher fuel prices and the weaker U.S. economy would have given them the final push.”
    AMR said in July it would buy 460 single-aisle jets — 260 from Airbus SAS and 200 from Boeing Co. (BA) — in the industry’s biggest-ever order. The orders remain “rock solid,” Horton said yesterday.
    “When we’re completed with this process, our company will be competitive and poised to grow and prosper and go out and capitalize on these aircraft orders,” he said.
    MD-80s Replaced
    American’s mainline jet fleet of 619 planes includes 247 twin-engine MD-80s made by McDonnell Douglas Corp., according to the airline’s website. Boeing acquired McDonnell Douglas in 1997. Those planes, which are no longer in production, are being replaced by Boeing 737-800s that are about one-third more fuel efficient.
    Placing an order for aircraft “creates a contract,” and in bankruptcy accepting or rejecting the contract will be up to AMR, said Scott Peltz, the national leader of RSM McGladrey’s Financial Advisory Service in Chicago. Boeing and other suppliers will probably have representatives at AMR’s bankruptcy hearings who “will be looking at what their options are,” he said.
    Boeing said it has “no reason to doubt” that the jet order remains pivotal to AMR. Boeing and Airbus will provide $13 billion of financing on the first 230 jets, American said in July.
    ‘Key Part’
    “We anticipate as part of American’s reorganization that new, fuel-efficient airplanes will be a key part of their ongoing success,” Mark Hooper, a spokesman for Chicago-based Boeing, said in an e-mailed statement.
    International Consolidated Airlines Group SA, a U.K.-based joint venture partner with AMR that owns British Airways and Spain’s Iberia, said it has “every confidence in the future of American Airlines” and looks forward to working with Horton.
    Weil Gotshal, based in New York, is AMR’s lead bankruptcy counsel. The company’s financial adviser is Rothschild Inc.
    American Airlines was formed from companies including Robertson Aircraft Corp. of Missouri, which employed Charles A. Lindbergh as a mail pilot, according to the carrier’s website. The companies began consolidating in 1929 and became American Airlines in 1934.
    Company stock began trading in 1939, and during World War II, half of American’s planes flew for the Air Transport Command. American pioneered nonstop transcontinental service in 1953 and 20 years later was the first major airline to hire a woman pilot, according to its website.
    The case is In re AMR Corp., 11-15463, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
    To contact the reporters on this story: Phil Milford in Wilmington, Delaware

  • TravelwithKids-NoNo..

    The no-kids-allowed movement is spreading
    by Piper Weiss, Shine Staff, on Tue Jul 26, 2011 1:52pm PDT

    What’s the matter with kids today and why doesn’t anyone want them around? In June, Malaysia Airlines banned babies from many of their first class cabins, prompting other major airlines to consider similar policies.

    Lately, complaints about screaming kids are being taken seriously, not only by airlines, but by hotels, movie theaters, restaurants, and even grocery stores.

    Read more about restaurants around the country banning kids.

    Earlier this month, McDain’s, a Pittsburgh area restaurant that banned kids under 6 became a mascot for the no-kids-zone movement.

    According to a Pittsburgh local news poll, more than half of area residents were in favor of the ban. And now big business is paying attention.

    “Brat bans could well be the next frontier in destination and leisure-product marketing,” writes Robert Klara in an article on the child-free trend in AdWeek.

    Klara points to Leavethembehind.com, a travel website for kid-free vacations, with a massive list of yoga retreats, luxury resorts and bargain hotels around the world that ban children.

    “Call me a grinch, a misanthrope, a DINK (dual-income-no-kids), or the anti-cute-police, but I hate (hate a thousand times over) ill-behaved children/infants/screaming banshees in upscale restaurants (ok, anywhere, really, but I don’t want any death threats),” writes Charlotte Savino on Travel and Leisure’s blog. She lists a slew of a popular destination restaurants with kid-free areas and policies for travelers looking for quiet vacation dining.

    Traveling is one thing, but what about in kids’ own hometowns? Should kids been banned from local movie theaters, like they were at a recent s-only Harry Potter screening? In Texas, one cinema chain has even flipped the model, banning kids under six altogether, except on specified “baby days”.

    Even running errands with toddlers may be changing. This summer Whole Foods stores in Missouri are offering child-free shopping hours (kids are allowed inside but childcare service is available for parents who want to shop kid-free.) Meanwhile in Florida, a controversy brews over whether kids can be banned from a condominium’s outdoor area. That’s right, some people don’t even want kids outdoors.

    When did kids become the equivalent of second-hand smoke? Blame a wave of childless s with money to spare. “Empty nesters continue to wield a huge swath of discretionary spending dollars, and population dips in first-world countries mean more childless couples than ever,” writes AdWeek’s Klara.

    Catering to the child-free community may be good for business but is it good for parents? It could help narrow choices and make kid-friendly environments even kid-friendlier. And let’s be honest, babies won’t miss flying first class. They won’t even remember it. But their moms and dads will.

    Most parents with young children have self-imposed limits on spending and leisure. This new movement imposes limits set by the public. And the public isn’t as child-friendly as it used to be. As businesses respond to their new breed of ‘first-class’ clientele, are parents in danger of becoming second-class citizens?

    What do you all think?